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sale on coach handbags I thought, 'If I can be at ease in this situation, maybe I really have grown up.'Blair High students learn dollars and senseWhen it comes to business savvy, 17 year old Anthony Vasylyuk is likely ahead of many students at Montgomery Blair High School in Silver Spring.He has a savings account where he puts the money he earns from his job as a lifeguard, money he says will increase after he becomes certified to give swimming lessons. At home, he has the prototype for an invention he is working on: a pouch to place valuables that goes on the front of a baseball cap.When selling his hat pouch to an imaginary shop owner, Vasylyuk lands $250 but puts only $40 into his group savings account. It a fateful number, because as part of the simulation, Vasylyuk learns one of his hats is defective and it is going to cost $40 to repair it.His group account, which contains the funds used for the business owners personal expenses, is suddenly empty.can just put all your money in the business or the money for your personal life isn going to be there, Vasylyuk, a senior, said solemnly Thursday.The business simulation exercise is part of his entrepreneurship class, a required course in Blair 300 student Entrepreneurship Academy, one of five academies at Blair that allow students to take courses on specific interests they want to pursue in the future.Vasylyuk realization might seem like a basic premise of managing money, but his teacher, Kevin Murley, said it is an advanced concept for most students, who are woefully undereducated in personal finance.was an eye opener for me to see what areas they don